History of Fort Nassau
Sunday, February 18, 2007
Gloucester County History and Genealogy
HISTORY
OF FORT NASSAU IN BRIEF:
"In 1621, the privileged West Indian Company
was formed in Holland. In 1623 this company dispatched a ship loaded with settlers,
subsistence and articles of trade, under the command of Cornelius Mey. He gave
his own name to the cap at the northern part of the Delaware Bay which it still
retains--Cape May. He built a fort by a stream called by the natives Sassackon.
It is a tributary of the Delaware, a few miles below Camden. He named the fortification
Fort Nassau. It is highly probably that this was the first attempt ever
made to form a settlement on the eastern shore of the Delaware. David Pieterson
DeVries, who arrived in the Delaware in the winter of 1630-31, found that Fort
Nassau had fallen into the hands of the Indians. He built a fort, colonized his
immigrants, and went back to Holland." †1
HISTORY - CONFLICTING
STORIES:
Depending on which history you read [both in print and on the
internet], each contains a slightly different version regarding the origin of
Fort Nassau, its history, and its location.
According
to the history of Westville, found on their web site [ my
personal comments are highlighted in red] " After Cornelius Mey established
the first white settlement on Burlington Island, he established Fort Nassau in
1623. The site of Fort Nassau has been a subject of much controversy, the Hon.
Franit H. Stewart, president of the Gloucester County Historical Society has set
the site as back of what is now Brooklawn, at the mouth of Timber Creek, just
west of where Big Timber Creek, Little Timber Creek and the Delaware join. Records
show that the Dutch trading post was "about fifteen leagues up the river
on the eastern shore. The Dutch had built two strongholds or forts, largest
about 16 miles up the river on the eastern shore, called Nassau". [There
are inconsistencies in the measurements indicated here--is it 15 leagues or 16
miles? Did they mean to say furlongs instead? 15 furlongs = approximately 2 current
miles, i.e. 15 x 0.125. The original Dutch navigators would
not have used the term league.] In 1651, Peter Loursenson, a Dutch
sailor sent to the Delaware, commented that Fort Nassau consisted of a trading
house with ten or 12 servants belonging to It. Records further show that in 164j
Nassau was occupied by 20 men and was used by the Dutch until 1651. In 1651, Fort
Nassau was abandoned. Its cannon and other weapons were installed at Fort Casisnir
(at New Castle). Its last trading commissioner Andries Hudde, served in the same
capacity in the new fort. The abandoned fort remained a landmark for many years.
In 1750, Acrelius, pastor of the Old Swede Church, Philadelphia, wrote in his
diary, "Nassau is still standing two and a half miles north of Manias Hook
(Hantaes hoeck)." [note the spelling here is incorrect, should be Manta's
Hook [Mantaes Hoeck].
According to "Accessible
Archives: "it appears that the sailors and soldiers were stationed at
a little fort which was hurriedly built for their protection at a spot which the
natives called "Tekaacho" near Gloucester Point, immediately opposite
the lower part of the city of Philadelphia. This was Fort Nassau, the first
building known to have been erected by civilized men on the shores of the Delaware.
Its exact site cannot now be pointed out, but it was supposed to be upon the north
branch of Timber Creek or as the Dutch called it "Timmer Kill," (21*)
then called "Sapackon." It was built close to the point of rocks, its
southern rampart being within a few feet of the creek.(22*) The year in which
the fort was built is disputed, but it is probable that its construction was undertaken
about 1623, which was doubtless also the time of the settlement near the site
of Trenton. The men and women of the Walloons at this isolated station grew homesick,
and within a year or so returned to Manhattan. The fort too was abandoned after
one or two years of occupations though it was irregularly occupied by a few soldiers
for short periods, down to 1642 when it was continuously garrisoned until 1650
or 1651 when the Dutch themselves destroyed it, because it was too high up the
river and too far from the chief theatre of their activities to serve any valuable
purpose. It appears to have been occasionally used as a lodging place by the Indians,
probably at such times as they expected trading vessels to arrive which was at
least once a year, and De Vries found it thus tenanted by the savages when he
visited it in 1633."
[(21*) On the map in Campanius’
work it is designated as being between the two branches of Timber Creek.
(22*)
Various discoveries and relics have been made at different times in digging at
the site of the fort. In 1745 a Spanish privateer threatened to land on the Delaware,
and fears being entertained that they would attack Wilmington, attempts were made
to place the old fort in repair. In digging the ground for that purpose, they
found several pieces of money, with Queen Christina’s stamp upon it. On the
31st of March, 1755, on taking up by chance some pieces of the walls, there were
found many cannon balls, granadoes, and other similar things, which had been kept
carefully concealed since the surrender of the fort by Rising. Five pieces of
cannon (according to Acrelius) wore kept mounted there previously, as at the treaty
of Aix la Chapelle, in 1646, an English salute was fired from them, in honor of
the Governor, who was going to meet the Legislature at New Castle.]
According to PICTORIAL
FIELD BOOK OF THE REVOLUTION by Benson J. Lossing: "Near
where Gloucester, in New Jersey, now stands, he built Fort Nassau. This was the
first white settlement on the shores of the Delaware, but it was not permanent.
In 1631, Captain David Pieterson de Vries entered the Delaware River with two
ships and about thirty colonists. He was associated with Godyn, Bloemart, and
Van Rensselaer, wealthy Dutch patroons, 9 in establishing a permanent settlement
on the Delaware for the purpose of cultivating tobacco and grain, and prosecuting
the whale and seal fishing. He built Fort Oplandt, near Lewiston, Delaware. De
Vries returned to Holland, and when he came back, in 1632, his colony was destroyed.
The arms of Holland, emblazoned on a piece of tin, had been raised upon a pole.
An Indian stole the metal to make a tobacco-box of it. Osset, the commander, quarreled
with the Indians, and the latter fell upon the colonists, while at work in the
fields, and butchered every one of them. De Vries made peace with the tribe, but,
finding Fort Nassau deserted, and the whole settlement a desolation, he left the
bay forever; for, before the Dutch could re-establish their power, the patent
granted to Lord Baltimore, proprietor of Maryland." †3
According to Area
History: Contents
of Vol I, Advertisement, & General Introductory History - Watson's Annals
of Philadelphia And Pennsylvania, 1857, front section:
"About that
time, the States General appear to have enlarged their schemes
of profit from
the country, by an attempt at colonization; for they grant,
in the year 1621,
their patent "for the country of the Nieu Nederland, to
the privileged
West India Company". From this time the Dutch began to
progress southwardly
over the lands bordering on both sides of the Delaware,
which they then called
the Zuydt or South river, in contradistinction to
their Noords or North river.
To protect their settlers, they built in 1623,
their first fort on the Delaware,
and probably made their first village, at
the place since known as Gloucester
point, in New Jersey, at a little
distance below the present Philadelphia.
This was of course the proper
"Ancient Dominion", to us ! The fortification
was called "Nassau". The
place was known to the Indians by the name
of Arwanus [also as Tekaacho] and
by the ancient Philadelphians by the less
poetical name of Pine point."†5
According to: Local History: Chapters IV & V - Part I: Early Voyagers
and Traders & The First Swedish Settlement: Bean's 1884 History of Montgomery
Co, PA:" p 54
"Mey, appears either to have accompanied them here
or visited them soon after their arrival. He selected a site for their settlement,
planting the Walloons on Verhulsten Island, near the present city of Trenton,
N.J., and hastened the construction of a log fort or stockade for his sailors
and soldiers at the mouth of the Timmer Kill, on the New Jersey bank of the Delaware,
not far from where Gloucester now stands. This fort was called "Nassau."
Its exact site is not determined, nor can we decide the original Indian name of
the spot, having such a variety to choose from. [See NOTE 4-6.]
[NOTE
4-6.] Hermaomessing,
Tachaacho, Armewamix, Arwames, Tekoke, Armenvereus,
etc. The year in which
the fort was built is also disputed, but the circumstances mentioned in the text
make it probable that its construction was undertaken very shortly after Capt.
Mey's arrival.